Law, Technology and Science for Oceans in Globalisation

IUU Fishing, Oil Pollution, Bioprospecting, Outer Continental Shelf

Editor:
Thirty-four experts on marine affairs and the law of the sea, from six continents, examine the emerging challenges for our World Ocean. The accumulating consequences of human activities on the seas indicate that the Earth may already have entered a new epoch, the Anthropocene, dominated by the human impact. This volume analyses developments in the interface of law, technology and science in some central law-of-the-sea issue areas. These are explored systematically in sections on the World Ocean in the Anthropocene epoch (Part I); combating illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing (Part II); combating illegal oil spills from ships (Part III); marine genetic resources and bioprospecting (Part IV); and the continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles from the baselines (Part V).

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Preliminary Material
By: D. Vidas
Pages: i–xxxiv
Subject Index
By: D. Vidas
Pages: 597–609
Davor Vidas is Director of Marine Affairs and Law of the Sea Programme, and Senior Research Fellow with Professor competence at the Fridtjof Nansen Institute, Norway. He has led many international research projects and has published extensively on international law.
Part I: THE WORLD OCEAN IN THE ANTHROPOCENE EPOCH
1: Responsibility for the Seas, Davor Vidas
2: The Development of the Law of the Sea since the Adoption of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea: Achievements and Challenges for the Future, Tullio Treves
3: Major Challenges of Globalisation for Seas and Oceans: Legal Aspects, Vladimir Golitsyn

Part II: COMBATING IUU FISHING
4: Occupying the High Ground: Technology and the War on IUU Fishing, Denzil G.M. Miller
5: Monitoring, Control and Surveillance Tools to Detect IUU Fishing and Related Activities, Michele Kuruc
6: Combating IUU Fishing: Interaction of Global and Regional Initiatives, Terje Lobach
7: FAO Action to Combat IUU Fishing: Scope of Initiatives and Constraints on Implementation, David J. Doulman
8: Developing a Model for Improved Governance by Regional Fisheries Management Organisations, Michael W. Lodge
9: IUU Fishing in Antarctic Waters: CCAMLR Actions and Regulations, Denzil G.M. Miller, Natasha Slicer and Eugene N. Sabourenkov
10: Using Technology in Combating IUU Fishing: The Potential of Satellite Remote Sensing, Neil Ansell, David Ardill, Harm Greidanus

Part III: ILLEGAL OIL SPILLS FROM SHIPS
11: Illegal Oil Spills from Ships: Monitoring by Remote Sensing, Olaf Trieschmann
12: Monitoring Oil Pollution from Ships: Experiences from the Northern Baltic Practice, Kati Tahvonen
13: Illegal Oil Discharges from Ships and Implementation Failures in the International Convention System, Z. Oya Özçayir
14: United States Criminal Enforcement of Deliberate Vessel Pollution: A Document-Based Approach to MARPOL, Richard A. Udell
15: The EU Ship-Source Pollution Directive and Recent Expansions of Coastal State Jurisdiction, Alan Khee-Jin Tan

Part IV: MARINE GENETIC RESOURCES AND BIOPROSPECTING
16: Is the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea the Legal Framework for All Activities in the Sea? The Case of Bioprospecting , Tullio Scovazzi
17: Regulating Uses of Marine Biodiversity on the Outer Continental Shelf, Joanna Mossop
18: Some Reflections on Bioprospecting in the Polar Regions, Harlan Cohen
19: International Law and the Genetic Resources of the Deep Sea, David Leary
20: Exploiting Marine Genetic Resources beyond National Jurisdiction and the International Protection of Intellectual Property Rights: Can They Coexist? Richard J. McLaughlin
21: Marine Genetic Resources in Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction and Intellectual Property Rights, Salvatore Arico
22: Evolving Perspectives on the International Seabed Area’s Genetic Resources: Fifteen Years after the ‘Deepest of Ironies,’ Lyle Glowka

Part V: CONTINENTAL SHELF BEYOND 200 NAUTICAL MILES
23: A Note on Submissions and Preliminary Information on the Continental Shelf Beyond 200 Nautical Miles, Davor Vidas
24: The Continental Shelf Beyond 200 Nautical Miles – a Crucial Element in the ‘Package Deal’: Historic Background and Implications for Today, Carl August Fleischer
25: The Work of the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf, Vladimir Jares
26: Submissions on the Outer Limit of the Continental Shelf: Practice to Date and Some Issues of Debate, Frida M. Armas-Pfirter
27: The Outer Continental Shelf in the Arctic Ocean: Legal Framework and Recent Developments, Ted L. McDorman
28: Towards Setting the Outer Limits of the Continental Shelf in the Arctic: On the Norwegian Submission and Recommendations of the Commission, Øystein Jensen
29: The Outer Continental Shelf in the Asia-Pacific Region: Progress and Prospects, Clive Schofield, Andi Arsana, Robert van de Poll
30: The Outer Continental Shelf and South American Coastal States, Maria Teresa Infante
Index of Treaties and Other International Instruments
Subject Index

Scholars and graduate students of international law and the law of the sea; political scientists interested in Earth System governance; decision-makers and experts at international organisations, NGOs and national agencies
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